​‘Social and ethnic apartheid’ plagues France - Prime Minister

The French Prime Minister Manuel Valls, stressed the need to address the “territorial, social and ethnic apartheid” as well as “tensions that have been going on for years,” in a strongly worded indictment of inequality in French society.

The devastating
terrorist attacks carried out by French-born radical Islamists
that claimed 17 lives earlier this month, have brought internal
divisions within the country to the forefront of a national
debate.

"These last few days have underscored a lot of evil that is
gnawing at our country and challenges we must be equal to,"
Valls told reporters in an address on Tuesday.

Valls emphasized France must prioritize fighting racism and
discrimination in order to effectively combat the spread of
extremism.

"The fight against hatred, anti-Semitism in all its forms,
racism — these fights are absolutely urgent," Valls said.
The prime minister added that the young people who refused to
participate in the nationwide minute of silence for victims of
the attack "are symptoms of something that is not going
well."

"We have to look at all the divisions, the tensions that have
been going on for years... the neglect of the suburbs, the
ghettos, the social misery," he added.

France is dotted with some 750 “sensitive urban zones”
(ZUS), which are impoverished areas home to an ethnically diverse
population of over five million. These neighbourhoods are
characterized by a high percentage of public housing and high
unemployment, which is often twice the national average.

In 2005, a string of riots erupted in many of these troubled
suburbs, prompting the French government to declare a state of
emergency.

Following the unrest, the government set aside some $55 billion
for a nine-year renewal and reform program. However, the program
has met with little success, and the ZUS continue to be hotbeds
of criminal activity, which is frequently blamed on unemployment,
low levels of education, and a hostile police force, as well as
racial discrimination against the residents, many of whom are of
North African descent.

Valls noted the need to fight against “the social
misery” which “is compounded by the daily
discriminations because someone does not have the right name, the
right color of skin, or because she is a woman."

The gunmen responsible for the Charlie Hebdo massacre and
supermarket killings from January 7-9 were of Algerian and
African descent, heralding a cry from right-wing National Front
to curb immigration.

In her recent opinion piece in The New York Times, the party’s leader Marine
Le Pen criticized the government and the political establishment
for “20 years of mistakes” on immigration and Europe.
She added that immigration offered a fertile ground for the
creation of radical Islam.

The French government has rejected such suggestions and is set to
unveil proposals this week to tackle issues such as security,
education and urban policy.

"Reforming means fighting relentlessly against the
inequalities," the prime minister said. "We have to
battle each day this terrible feeling that there are second class
citizens or some people that are more import than others."